Pakistan army starts North Waziristan ground offensive

Mehreen Zahra-Malik

4 Min Read

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani forces on Thursday launched their first major offensive in years against Taliban militants near the Afghan border after several rounds of government-led talks aimed at ending an insurgency in the remote region failed.

The offensive targeted the Matchis Camp near the capital of North Waziristan, an area set up to house Afghan refugees but now a hub for local and foreign militants, said Siraj Ahmed, the highest government official in the region.

Pakistani-made surveillance drones also hovered over the area, the first time the country has launched unmanned aircraft.

Disagreements over how to handle the Taliban insurgency have marred relations between Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Pakistan’s powerful army, which has been pushing for a major military offensive.

Speculation that the army might launch an offensive in the frontier tribal areas has been building as the government’s attempts to engage the Pakistani Taliban in peace talks have floundered in recent months.

There has also been a surge in attacks on military outposts.

“We announced yesterday that people should leave the area,” Ahmed told Reuters. “This morning, tanks moved in and helicopter ships began demolishing houses in the Matchis camp area.”

After the attack, the Pakistani Taliban said they would strike back.

“There is no possibility of peace if these acts continue,” said a senior Taliban commander, Omar Khurasani.

“We will avenge the blood of our tribal brothers and get active. God willing the day is not far that Islam will be successful and rule the whole world. We just need a little courage for that.”

The Pakistan government signed an unofficial non-aggression pact with pro-government militants in the area in 2007 and there has been no ground offensive in the area since.

In the last few months, the army has intermittently used aircraft to target militant hideouts, and on Wednesday Pakistani fighter jets bombed suspected militant hideouts in North Waziristan, killing dozens of people.

On Wednesday, an officer of the Pakistan army was killed in a gun battle with Taliban militants in the Mir Ali area of the tribal belt, the army said.

“The offensive could be the army’s toughest test in years,” a senior military official said.

Foreign militants from various places including Central Asia have long been known to be based in the region.

Pakistani authorities imposed a curfew in the area on Tuesday and residents said many people had fled their homes anticipating shelling and raids by helicopter gunships.

Hafiz Gul Bahadur, a powerful militant leader in Pakistan’s North Waziristan border region, criticized the offensive and told Reuters the council of militant groups he heads was meeting to decide to suspend the 2007 peace deal.

Bahadur is known to have links with militant groups in tribal North Waziristan, including the Haqqani network, the most high-profile threat to U.S. forces in Afghanistan.